4
a

vsoco

to internal and external thyroid radiation at an average level of 1400
rad. The external risk coefficient ranged between 2.5 and 4.9 cancers
per million person-rad-years at risk, and thus, from our computations,
the internal risk coefficient for the Marshallese children was
estimated to range between 1.0 and 1.4 cancers per million

person-rad-years at risk. In contrast, for individuals more than 10
years of age at the time of exposure, the dose from internal

irradiation of the thyroid with short-lived internal emitters produced
several times more thyroid cancer than did the same dose of radiation
given externally. The external risk coefficients for the older age
groups were reported in the above literature to be in the range of 1.0
to 3.3 cancers per million person-rad-years-at risk. The authors
computed internal risk coefficients of 3.3 to 8.1 cancers per million
person-rad-years at risk for adolescent and adult groups. This higher
sensitivity to cancer induction

in the exposed adolescents

and adults,

is different from that seen in other exposed groups. The small number
of cancers in the exposed population and the influence of increased

levels of TSH, nonuniform irradiation of the thyroid, and thyroid cell

killing at High dose make it difficult to draw firm conclusions from
these studies. 14 references, 8 tables.
Major Descriptors: *NEOPLASMS -- RADIOINDUCTION; *THYROID -- NEOPLASMS;

*THYROID. -- RADIATION DOSES
Descriptors: AGE DEPENDENCE; EXPERIMENTAL DATA; MARSHALL ISLANDS; RADIATION
ACCIDENTS; RISK ASSESSMENT
Broader Terms: ACCIDENTS; BODY; DATA; DISEASES; DOSES; ENDOCRINE GLANDS;
GLANDS; INFORMATION; ISLANDS; MICRONESIA; NUMERICAL DATA; OCEANIA;
ORGANS

Subject Categories: 560151*
-- Radiation Effects on Animals -- Man
560161
-- Radionuclide Effects, Kinetics, & Toxicology -- Man
INIS Subject Categories: C1500*
-- Effects of External Radiation on Man
C2110
-- Radioisotope effects, kinetics & toxicology in man

10/5/476
(Item 176 from file: 103)
01939471
NOV-87-046438; EDB-87-067132
Title: Review of RBE and OER values for Cf-neutrons

Author(s):

Kal,

H.B.

Affiliation: Radiobiological Institute TNO, Rijswijk
Source:

Nucl.

Sci.

Appl.

(United States)

Publication Date: 1986
p 303-316
Document Type: Journal Article
Language: English
Journal Announcement: INS8704
Subfile:

INS

(US Atomindex input).

NOV

v 2:3.

Coden:

NSAPD

(DOE contractor)

Country of Origin: Netherlands
Abstract: The isotope californium-252 was first isolated and characterized
after the nuclear explosion which took place in the Eniwetok Island
complex in November 1952.
Californium decays by alpha emission and by
spontaneous fission where fission fragments, X and gamma rays and
neutrons are emitted.
The effective half-life dominated by alpha decay

is about 2.66 year.

Since the discovery of /sup 252/Cf and its

production for biological research in the late sixties, several tens of
reports on responses of many biological systems to treatments with
Cf-neutrons have been published.
The two quantities of practical
interest are the relative biological effectiveness, RBE, and the oxygen

enhancement ratio,

OER.

The RBE is a measure for comparison of the

doses of californium and radium gamma rays needed for a specific
biological endpoint.
Laboratory studies of RBE can provide a useful
guide to the doses to be applied in clinical practice with californium
radiation.
The OER is a measure for comparison of the doses required
for a specific biological endpoint in the absence and in the presence
of oxygen.| From numerous experiments it has been established that the
OER of fast neutrons is lower than that of gamma rays.
It is commonly
believed that one of the limitations of radiotherapy is the presence of
a hypoxic fraction of cells in tumours.
Therefore, the potential

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