-4~Assuming that this formula is appropriate for the continuous
alpha particle irradiation from internal alpha emitters, with very
high LET, short track in tissue, and high cell sterilizing and
killing efficiency and effect within short distances of the sources,
and applying to it various dose rates (R), a given constant time
of exposure (t) and a given constant mean life of normal cell and
singly mutated cell (I,), the formula seems to indicate that for
varying internally administered amounts of alpha emitter (continuous
alpha irradiation), i.e., different doses and associated dose rates,
“the tumor incidence would be proportional to the square of the dose
or the square of the dose rate, and the incidence per unit dose would
increase in proportion to increasing dose or increasing dose rate.
This is compatible with the dose-incidence relationship for alpha
radiation-induced bone tumor incidence in dogs cited by the author
in lines 13-16, page 4 (see comments on that sentence above).

This

kind of dose-incidence relationship for alpha emitters (involving
continuous irradiation)

indicates decreasing effectiveness of doses

in the rising portion of the dose-incidence curve with the decreasing
dose rate that is associated with decreasing dose.
It is difficult to reconcile these findings with the author's
next statement, as follows:

‘

Page 4, line 28 to Page 5, line 3 - "This tumor risk relationship
makes it abundantly clear that a linear extrapolation to low dose rates

is not only conservative for alpha radiation induced tumors, but rather

that there is a marked increase dose-rate vs. risk relationship."
Comments;
comments.

Reference is made to the immediately preceding set of

For varying amounts of internally administered alpha emitter

Select target paragraph3