Effects of Acute Ionizing Radiation on Incorporation of ^{131}{\rm IUDR}$ by Cotton Rats, Sigmodon hispidus

Acute gamma irradiation affected the incorporation of the thymidine analog $5\text{-}{}^{131}{\rm iodo}\text{-}2^{\prime}\text{-deoxyuridine}$ (^{131}{\rm IUDR}$) by cotton rats, Sigmodon hispidus. Absorbed doses of 100, 500, and 1000 rads administered 24 hours before injection depressed whole-body...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiation research 1969-04, Vol.38 (1), p.109-124
Hauptverfasser: O'Farrell, Thomas P., Dunaway, Paul B.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Acute gamma irradiation affected the incorporation of the thymidine analog $5\text{-}{}^{131}{\rm iodo}\text{-}2^{\prime}\text{-deoxyuridine}$ (^{131}{\rm IUDR}$) by cotton rats, Sigmodon hispidus. Absorbed doses of 100, 500, and 1000 rads administered 24 hours before injection depressed whole-body measurements of radioactivity retained at 48 hours postinjection to 76%, 38%, and 28%, respectively, of control values. The greatest depression of total activity retained within tissues occurred in the intestines, where activity levels were reduced to 47%, 18%, and 1.5% of control values. Since the data included responses from maximum incorporation in controls to minimum incorporation in animals irradiated at 1000 rads, a regression of activity remaining in the intestines as a function of total body burden was calculated to interpolate responses at intermediate dose levels. The in vivo measurements were a useful index to radiation insult at doses below 1000 rads. The method described should serve as a valuable adjunct to other techniques for measuring the effects of ionizing radiation in free-ranging mammals at dose levels that are too low to induce gross pathological responses or death. At the highest dose, activity accumulated in the excretory pathways and the gastrointestinal contents; the latter may have been due to a delayed emptying syndrome of the tract.
ISSN:0033-7587
1938-5404