Congdon C C
Health Phys. 1987 May;52(5):593-7. doi: 10.1097/00004032-198705000-00010.
Starting in the early 1940s, Egon Lorenz and collaborators at the National Cancer Institute began an extended study of chronic low-level ionizing radiation effects in what was then the tolerance range for man. Observations on life span, body weight and radiation carcinogenesis, among others, were made in mice, guinea pigs and rabbits. At the then-permissible exposure level, 0.1 R** per 8-h day until natural death, experimental mice and guinea pigs had a slightly greater mean life span compared to control animals. In addition, there was marked weight gain during the growth phase in both species. Increased tumor incidence was also observed at the 0.1-R level in mice. The primary hypothesis for increased median life span has been rebound regenerative hyperplasia during the early part of the exposure; in the presence of continuing injury, there is physiological enhancement of defense mechanisms against intercurrent infection. The body weight gain has not been explained.
从20世纪40年代初开始,埃贡·洛伦兹和美国国立癌症研究所的合作者对处于当时人类耐受范围内的慢性低剂量电离辐射效应展开了一项长期研究。他们对小鼠、豚鼠和兔子的寿命、体重以及辐射致癌作用等进行了观察。在当时允许的暴露水平下,即每天8小时暴露于0.1伦琴(R)直至自然死亡,实验小鼠和豚鼠的平均寿命相比对照动物略长。此外,这两个物种在生长阶段体重均显著增加。在小鼠中,0.1伦琴水平时也观察到肿瘤发生率增加。中位寿命增加的主要假说是在暴露初期出现了反弹再生性增生;在持续损伤的情况下,针对并发感染的防御机制会在生理上得到增强。体重增加的原因尚未得到解释。