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服务于生物医学的核能:美国原子能委员会的放射性同位素计划,1946 - 1950年

Nuclear energy in the service of biomedicine: the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission's radioisotope program, 1946-1950.

作者信息

Creager Angela N H

机构信息

Department of History and Program in History of Science, Princeton University, 129 Dickinson Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544-1017, USA.

出版信息

J Hist Biol. 2006 Winter;39(4):649-84. doi: 10.1007/s10739-006-9108-2.

Abstract

The widespread adoption of radioisotopes as tools in biomedical research and therapy became one of the major consequences of the "physicists' war" for postwar life science. Scientists in the Manhattan Project, as part of their efforts to advocate for civilian uses of atomic energy after the war, proposed using infrastructure from the wartime bomb project to develop a government-run radioisotope distribution program. After the Atomic Energy Bill was passed and before the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) was formally established, the Manhattan Project began shipping isotopes from Oak Ridge. Scientists and physicians put these reactor-produced isotopes to many of the same uses that had been pioneered with cyclotron-generated radioisotopes in the 1930s and early 1940s. The majority of early AEC shipments were radioiodine and radiophosphorus, employed to evaluate thyroid function, diagnose medical disorders, and irradiate tumors. Both researchers and politicians lauded radioisotopes publicly for their potential in curing diseases, particularly cancer. However, isotopes proved less successful than anticipated in treating cancer and more successful in medical diagnostics. On the research side, reactor-generated radioisotopes equipped biologists with new tools to trace molecular transformations from metabolic pathways to ecosystems. The U.S. government's production and promotion of isotopes stimulated their consumption by scientists and physicians (both domestic and abroad), such that in the postwar period isotopes became routine elements of laboratory and clinical use. In the early postwar years, radioisotopes signified the government's commitment to harness the atom for peace, particularly through contributions to biology, medicine, and agriculture.

摘要

放射性同位素作为生物医学研究和治疗工具的广泛应用,成为了“物理学家的战争”给战后生命科学带来的主要后果之一。曼哈顿计划的科学家们,作为战后倡导原子能民用的努力的一部分,提议利用战时炸弹项目的基础设施来开展一项由政府运营的放射性同位素分配计划。在《原子能法案》通过后且原子能委员会(AEC)正式成立之前,曼哈顿计划就开始从橡树岭运送同位素。科学家和医生将这些反应堆产生的同位素用于许多与20世纪30年代和40年代初回旋加速器产生的放射性同位素所开创的相同用途。早期原子能委员会运送的大部分货物是放射性碘和放射性磷,用于评估甲状腺功能、诊断疾病和照射肿瘤。研究人员和政治家都公开称赞放射性同位素在治疗疾病,特别是癌症方面的潜力。然而,同位素在治疗癌症方面的效果不如预期,而在医学诊断方面则更为成功。在研究方面,反应堆产生的放射性同位素为生物学家提供了新工具,用于追踪从代谢途径到生态系统的分子转化。美国政府对同位素的生产和推广刺激了国内外科学家和医生对其的使用,以至于在战后时期,同位素成为实验室和临床使用的常规元素。在战后初期,放射性同位素标志着政府致力于利用原子实现和平,特别是通过对生物学、医学和农业的贡献。

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