Journal of Radiation Research
Online ISSN : 1349-9157
Print ISSN : 0449-3060
Differential Dose Responses of Pulmonary Tumor Types in the Rat after Inhalation of Plutonium Dioxide Aerosols
YOICHI OGHISOYUTAKA YAMADAHARUZO IIDAJIRO INABA
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1998 Volume 39 Issue 1 Pages 61-72

Details
Abstract
Dose responses were compared among primary lung tumors and their histological types induced by a single inhalation exposure of female Wistar strain rats to submicron-size and polydispersed aerosols of plutonium dioxide (239PuO2). While the primary lung tumors were found only in 2.3% of the unexposed control animals, the frequency of all the primary lung tumors in the exposed animals was 44% at the mean lung dose of 0.71 Gy, and increased sharply at the doses of 1.5 Gy or more, reaching the maximum of 97% at 5.4 Gy, and the dose responses around at 1.0 Gy were different between benign and malignant lung tumors. Almost all the pulmonary tumors in the exposed animals were classified into epithelial types such as adenomas, adenocarcinomas, adenosquamous carcinomas, and squamous cell carcinomas. The dose responses were different between these tumor types as shown by the peak incidence of adenomas at 0.71 Gy, adenocarcinomas at 2.9 Gy, adenosquamous and squamous cell carcinomas at 5.4-8.5 Gy, respectively. As the magnitudes of neoplastic lesions in pulmonary carcinomas were expressed by histological scores, metaplasias and adenomatous lesions most frequently appeared at doses of 1.5 Gy, while the appearance and increase of carcinomatous lesions differed in the dose ranges as shown by the peak incidence of adenocarcinomatous lesions at 2.9 Gy, and adenosquamous or squamous lesions at 5.4-6.6 Gy. These results indicate a differential dose response of pulmonary carcinogenesis in which metaplasias and benign adenomas were induced at lower doses (< 1.0 Gy), whereas malignant carcinomas were induced at relatively higher doses (> 1.5 Gy). Together with the increase of carcinomatous lesions at higher doses, the intranuclear p53 protein accumulation was detectable, but only in a few percentages of malignant carcinomas.
Content from these authors

This article cannot obtain the latest cited-by information.

© Japan Radiation Research Society
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top