Radiation hormesis and cancer

被引:18
|
作者
Calabrese, EJ [1 ]
Baldwin, LA [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Publ Hlth & Hlth Sci, Dept Environm Hlth Sci, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
来源
HUMAN AND ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT | 2002年 / 8卷 / 02期
关键词
radiation; hormesis; cancer; mutagenesis; risk assessment;
D O I
10.1080/20028091056944
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Despite the long history of radiation hormesis and the public health concerns with low-level exposures to ionizing radiation, there has been surprisingly little formal evaluation of whether hormetic effects are displayed with respect to radiation exposure and cancer incidence (i.e., reduced cancer risk at low radiation doses compared to controls, enhanced cancer risk at higher doses) until relatively recently. This paper reviews data relevant to the question of radiation hormesis and cancer with particular emphasis on experimental studies in animal models exposed to low levels of ionizing radiation. Data exist that provide evidence both consistent with and/or supportive of radiation hormesis. Other biomedical research provides potentially important mechanistic insight: low dose exposures have the capacity to activate immune function to prevent the occurrence of tumor development and metastasis; low doses of radiation have been shown to reduce mutagenic responses and induce endogenous antioxidant responses. These findings are consistent with epidemiological data suggesting an inverse relationship between background radiation and cancer incidence and with occupational epidemiological investigations in which low-dose exposure groups display markedly lower standardized mortality rates than the referent or control group.
引用
收藏
页码:327 / 353
页数:27
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] EVIDENCE SUPPORTING RADIATION HORMESIS IN ATOMIC BOMB SURVIVOR CANCER MORTALITY DATA
    Doss, Mohan
    DOSE-RESPONSE, 2012, 10 (04): : 584 - 592
  • [42] Radiation hormesis: an ecological and energetic perspective
    Parsons, PA
    MEDICAL HYPOTHESES, 2001, 57 (03) : 277 - 279
  • [43] Radiation hormesis and its potential to manage radiation injuries
    Bala, M
    Mathew, L
    JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC & INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH, 2000, 59 (12): : 988 - 994
  • [44] Ionizing Radiation and Translation Control: A Link to Radiation Hormesis?
    Kabilan, Usha
    Graber, Tyson E.
    Alain, Tommy
    Klokov, Dmitry
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2020, 21 (18) : 1 - 21
  • [45] HORMESIS FROM IONIZING-RADIATION
    LUCKEY, TD
    HEALTH PHYSICS, 1984, 46 (03): : 705 - 705
  • [46] RADIATION HORMESIS - AN EVOLUTIONARY EXPECTATION AND THE EVIDENCE
    PARSONS, PA
    APPLIED RADIATION AND ISOTOPES, 1990, 41 (09) : 857 - 860
  • [47] COMMENTS ON THE RADIATION HORMESIS SPECIAL ISSUE
    SAMUEL, T
    HEALTH PHYSICS, 1988, 54 (02): : 227 - 227
  • [48] Radiation hormesis: the demise of a legitimate hypothesis
    Calabrese, EJ
    Baldwin, LA
    HUMAN & EXPERIMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, 2000, 19 (01): : 76 - 84
  • [49] On radiation hormesis expressed in the immune system
    Liu, SZ
    CRITICAL REVIEWS IN TOXICOLOGY, 2003, 33 (3-4) : 431 - 441
  • [50] Radiation Hormesis: Historical and Current Perspectives
    Baldwin, Jonathan
    Grantham, Vesper
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 43 (04) : 242 - 246