484 FLIEDNER, ANDREWS, CRONKITE AND BOND cells during the first 2-4 days after exposure. They are known to occur under experimental conditions!” and may be as frequent as 50-60 per cent ofall granulocytesafter very high radiation doses.*® In the erythropoietic series, the final enucleation of multinucleated cells may result in the appearance of some macrocytes. An alternative possibility for the formation of multinucleated cells after radiation exposure is the fusion of two mononucleated cells. This has been demonstrated by time lapse photography of marrow cells** and of tissue culture cells.25 It is unknown what proportion of these abnormalcells originates from inhibited cytoplasmic division with complete nuclear division and what proportion from cell fusion. Although not proven, mononucleated giant cells may be the result of a disturbed cyto- and karyokinesis with continued DNA synthesis and uninterrupted cellular maturation. The occurrence of a skipping of cell division in erythropoiesis has been postulated by Stohlman*® in various states of erythropoietic activity and is suggestive in this study also for the white cell series early after irradiation. Such skipping of cell division with undisturbed cell maturation results in the net production of only 2n (if n is the number of skipped divisions) of the cells produced normally. Thus, the slope of granulocyte diminution early after whole body exposure is not only the result of interrupted new production at the stem cell level*! but is modified by the degree of mitotic inhibition of precursor cells. The presence of cytologic abnormalities 3.5 years after the accident, as indicated by some mitotic abnormalities, and an increase in the frequency of binucleated early erythroblasts is poorly understood. Chromosomal abnormalities were demonstrated in blood leukocyte cultures of these men by Bender.1® The abnormalities seen in the bone marrow can befoundin all those clinical conditions associated with an increased regeneratory activity of hemopoiesis, such as various forms of anemia, but they are also seen in leukemias.2253 The cell counts of the peripheral blood in these men,‘? as well as the mitotic indices in the marrow, were well within normal limits. Thus, the abnormalities shown mayindicate a slight increase in an “ineffective” hemopoiesis although the pathogenesis and significance are not established and must await longterm follow-up studies. SuMMARY 1. Serial marrow studies were performed during the first few days in eight men accidentally exposed to a mixed neutron gammairradiation. They showed the occurrence of a wave of cytologic abnormalities. These were identical with those seen in animal experiments 1-3 days after whole body irradiation. They were considered to be “mitotically connected” (M. C. Abn.) and included the occurrence of chromosomal bridges and chromosomalfragmentsin mitoses. In interphase cells, the main abnormalities were nuclear fragments (“karyomeres”) in the cytoplasm of erythroblasts, myelocytic cells and lymphocytes; bi- and multinucleated cells; and giant cells. The peak of ab-

Select target paragraph3