ACUTE RADIATION EFFECTS ON MAN 163 (Thomaset al., 1959). This leaves us with an unsatisfactory therapeutic vacuum between the highest dose level at which replacement therapy is effective and the lowest exposure that depresses the immune response sufficiently to allow a homologous graft to take. A similar gap may perhaps exist in man. It is difficult to estimate the dose range in humanbeings wherefunctional replacement therapy would be necessary and helpful. The inhabitants of the Marshall Islands who received about 175 r did not require therapy. Somevictims of the Oak Ridge accident received brief treatment with antibiotics (Brucer, 1959) and some of them were close to needing platelet transfusions. In general, replacement therapy will be needed for exposures above the level of the minimallethal dose, which is probably in the vicinity of 250r. Obviously, the frequency with which this treatmentwill be needed will increase with the dose. The upperlimit of exposure at which this therapy will be successful in man is not known. The Yugoslav accident (Jammetet al., 1959; Mathé et al., 1959) might have shed somelight on this question, but since bone marrowtransplants were also administered interpretation of the regeneration and survival data is difficult. Establishment of this upper limit is particularly important since it would also delineate when an attempt at bone marrowtransplantation would be justified. Homologous bone marrow transplantation in man may not be an innocuous procedure and should be employed only after serious consideration. At the present time attempts to transplant homologous bone marrowarejustified, we believe, in the presence of severe pancytopenia and when chances that replacement therapy alone would be sufficient are small. This would probably mean patients who had survived the gastrointestinal syndrome, who had vomited severely for more than 48 hours after exposure, who at 24 hours hadless than 500 lymphocytes per mm*, or who had a rapidly declining white cell count. Frequent bone marrow aspirations may be helpful in making this range. This programme can be summarized asfollows: difficult decision. It may be worth emphasizing again that bone marrow transplantation is not the only treatment available in acute radiation injury. If it is permissible to extrapolate to man the findings in dogs reviewed above, it may be expected that a conservative therapeutic replacement programme would be life-saving in many cases, particularly in the lower lethal dose 1. Large doses of antibiotics when signs of infection are present; the choice of antibiotics should preferably be based on repeated cultures and sensitivity tests. 2. In case of haemorrhage or immediate danger of bleeding, transfusions of fresh blood or platelet-rich plasma (within four hours after collection, preferably less), using siliconized equipment and plastic bags. 3. Protection of the patient against exogenous stresses, particularly infection.

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