The Linear No-Threshold Model does not Hold for Low-Dose Ionizing Radiation
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2004 papers
Abstract
Almost all of the data on the biological effects of ionizing radiation come from studies of high doses. However, the human population is unlikely to be exposed to such doses. Regulatory limits for radiation exposure are based on the linear no-threshold model, which predicts that the relationship between biological effects and radiation dose is linear, and that any dose has some effect. Chromosomal changes are an important effect of ionizing radiation because of their role in carcinogenesis. Here we exposed pKZ1 mice to single whole-body X-radiation doses as low as 1 microGy. We observed three different phases of response: (1) an induction of inversions at ultra-low doses, (2) a reduction below endogenous inversion frequency at low doses, and (3) an induction of inversions again at higher doses. These results do not fit a linear no-threshold model, and they may have implications for the way in which regulatory standards are presently set and for understanding radiation effects.
Related Papers
- → Investigation of DNA Damage Dose-Response Kinetics after Ionizing Radiation Schemes Similar to CT Protocols(2015)5 cited
- → Radiobiology and Radiation Protection(2023)1 cited
- → Influence of the radiation screening effect of test volumes of an apparatus for resistance to ionizing radiation(1998)
- → Radiation Characteristics and Units(2014)
- → IONIZING RADIATION AND RADIOBIOLOGICAL EFFECTS IN THE HUMAN BODY(2022)