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Comparative Study of Experimentally Induced Cancer of the Kidney in Mice and Rats with X-Rays

Abstract

Local irradiation of a kidney in rats and mice results in the development of radiation- induced cancers in the irradiated kidney. The production of these cancers is considerably greater in rats than in mice, and their frequency depends on: (1) The X-ray dose absorbed by the kidney; (2) The latency period which is longer for carcinomas than for sarcomas; and (3) The degree and extent of renal radiation- induced lesions. A study of the relationship between dose and carcinogenic effect has enabled us to define three types of X-ray dose: (a) An ineffective dose of 570 rads at which the inducement of cancer is zero; (b) An optimum dose of 1700 rads at which the frequency of renal tumours is maximal (85%); and (c) Excessive doses between 7000 and 14 000 rads after which the frequency of radiation-induced cancers of the kidney approaches zero. Studies of the latent period have shown that radiation-induced cancers of the kidney in mice do not appear until 790 days after irradiation, whereas in rats the first cancers appear after 280 days. As regards the mechanism of the inducement of renal cancer by radiation, we have been able to establish that cancers of the kidney  More>>
Authors:
Maldague, P. [1] 
  1. Cancer Institute, University of Louvain (Belgium)
Publication Date:
Nov 15, 1969
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
IAEA-SM-118/28
Resource Relation:
Conference: Symposium on Radiation-Induced Cancer, Athens (Greece), 28 Apr - 2 May 1969; Other Information: 13 refs., 13 figs., 3 tabs.; Related Information: In: Radiation-Induced Cancer. Proceedings of a Symposium on Radiation-Induced Cancer| 512 p.
Subject:
63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGANISMS AND BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS; BIOLOGICAL RADIATION EFFECTS; CARCINOGENS; CARCINOMAS; KIDNEYS; LATENCY PERIOD; LOCAL IRRADIATION; MICE; RADIATION DOSES; RATS; SARCOMAS
OSTI ID:
22182171
Research Organizations:
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria); World Health Organization, Geneva (Switzerland)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISSN 0074-1884; TRN: XA13M3986006670
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 439-457
Announcement Date:
Jan 23, 2014

Citation Formats

Maldague, P. Comparative Study of Experimentally Induced Cancer of the Kidney in Mice and Rats with X-Rays. IAEA: N. p., 1969. Web.
Maldague, P. Comparative Study of Experimentally Induced Cancer of the Kidney in Mice and Rats with X-Rays. IAEA.
Maldague, P. 1969. "Comparative Study of Experimentally Induced Cancer of the Kidney in Mice and Rats with X-Rays." IAEA.
@misc{etde_22182171,
title = {Comparative Study of Experimentally Induced Cancer of the Kidney in Mice and Rats with X-Rays}
author = {Maldague, P.}
abstractNote = {Local irradiation of a kidney in rats and mice results in the development of radiation- induced cancers in the irradiated kidney. The production of these cancers is considerably greater in rats than in mice, and their frequency depends on: (1) The X-ray dose absorbed by the kidney; (2) The latency period which is longer for carcinomas than for sarcomas; and (3) The degree and extent of renal radiation- induced lesions. A study of the relationship between dose and carcinogenic effect has enabled us to define three types of X-ray dose: (a) An ineffective dose of 570 rads at which the inducement of cancer is zero; (b) An optimum dose of 1700 rads at which the frequency of renal tumours is maximal (85%); and (c) Excessive doses between 7000 and 14 000 rads after which the frequency of radiation-induced cancers of the kidney approaches zero. Studies of the latent period have shown that radiation-induced cancers of the kidney in mice do not appear until 790 days after irradiation, whereas in rats the first cancers appear after 280 days. As regards the mechanism of the inducement of renal cancer by radiation, we have been able to establish that cancers of the kidney only develop from visible renal lesions. Radiation-induced cancers have not been observed in rats or mice whose kidneys were morphologically and functionally normal. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1969}
month = {Nov}
}