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Radiation-related ophthalmologic changes and aging among the atomic bomb survivors. A re-analysis

Abstract

The relationship of ionizing radiation to the age-related ophthalmologic findings of the 1978-80 ophthalmologic examination of the atomic bomb (A-bomb) survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has been reanalyzed using Dosimetry System 1986 eye organ dose estimates. The main purpose of this re-evaluation was to determine whether age and radiation exposure have an additive, synergistic, or antagonistic effect on ophthalmologic changes. The best model fitting axial opacities gives a significant positive effect for both linear dose-response and linear age-related regression coefficients and a significant negative effect for an interaction between radiation dose and age. Such a negative interaction implies an antagonistic effect in that the relative risks with relation to radiation doses decrease with increasing age. This phenomenon suggests that the lenses of younger persons are more sensitive to radiation than are those of older persons. However, the best-fitting relationship for posterior subcapsular changes suggested a linear-quadratic dose response and linear age-related effects. The quadratic estimate of radiation dose squared showed a highly significant effect with a negative trend, but the negative quadratic estimate was so extremely small it had almost no contributive value within an appropriative dose area. These data suggest an additive relationship between aging and radiation for the  More>>
Publication Date:
May 01, 1993
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
RERF-TR-18-91
Reference Number:
SCA: 560151; PA: JPN-94:001048; EDB-94:047629; ERA-19:013314; NTS-94:018240; SN: 94001163752
Resource Relation:
Other Information: PBD: May 1993
Subject:
63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRON. POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGS. AND BIOL. MAT.; A-BOMB SURVIVORS; CRYSTALLINE LENS; DELAYED RADIATION EFFECTS; RADIATION DOSES; AGE DEPENDENCE; HIROSHIMA; NAGASAKI; OPHTHALMOLOGY; DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIPS; 560151; MAN
OSTI ID:
10131559
Research Organizations:
Radiation Effects Research Foundation, Hiroshima (Japan)
Country of Origin:
Japan
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE94748533; TRN: JP9401048
Availability:
OSTI; NTIS; INIS
Submitting Site:
JPN
Size:
24 p.
Announcement Date:
Jul 04, 2005

Citation Formats

Otake, Masanori, Finch, S C, Choshi, Kanji, Takaku, Isao, Mishima, Hiromu, and Takase, Tomoko. Radiation-related ophthalmologic changes and aging among the atomic bomb survivors. A re-analysis. Japan: N. p., 1993. Web.
Otake, Masanori, Finch, S C, Choshi, Kanji, Takaku, Isao, Mishima, Hiromu, & Takase, Tomoko. Radiation-related ophthalmologic changes and aging among the atomic bomb survivors. A re-analysis. Japan.
Otake, Masanori, Finch, S C, Choshi, Kanji, Takaku, Isao, Mishima, Hiromu, and Takase, Tomoko. 1993. "Radiation-related ophthalmologic changes and aging among the atomic bomb survivors. A re-analysis." Japan.
@misc{etde_10131559,
title = {Radiation-related ophthalmologic changes and aging among the atomic bomb survivors. A re-analysis}
author = {Otake, Masanori, Finch, S C, Choshi, Kanji, Takaku, Isao, Mishima, Hiromu, and Takase, Tomoko}
abstractNote = {The relationship of ionizing radiation to the age-related ophthalmologic findings of the 1978-80 ophthalmologic examination of the atomic bomb (A-bomb) survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has been reanalyzed using Dosimetry System 1986 eye organ dose estimates. The main purpose of this re-evaluation was to determine whether age and radiation exposure have an additive, synergistic, or antagonistic effect on ophthalmologic changes. The best model fitting axial opacities gives a significant positive effect for both linear dose-response and linear age-related regression coefficients and a significant negative effect for an interaction between radiation dose and age. Such a negative interaction implies an antagonistic effect in that the relative risks with relation to radiation doses decrease with increasing age. This phenomenon suggests that the lenses of younger persons are more sensitive to radiation than are those of older persons. However, the best-fitting relationship for posterior subcapsular changes suggested a linear-quadratic dose response and linear age-related effects. The quadratic estimate of radiation dose squared showed a highly significant effect with a negative trend, but the negative quadratic estimate was so extremely small it had almost no contributive value within an appropriative dose area. These data suggest an additive relationship between aging and radiation for the induction of posterior subcapsular changes, and they also indicate that there is no distinct evidence of a radiation-induced aging effect. The radiation-related relative risks increase with a log linearity. The decrease of visual acuity and accommodation with increasing age were comparable in both exposed and control subjects, with age-related visual acuity decreasing more than accommodation. (J.P.N.).}
place = {Japan}
year = {1993}
month = {May}
}