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Fractionated Irradiation Augments Inter-Strain Variation of Skin Reactions among Three Strains of Mice
Author(s) -
Toshie Ohta,
Mayumi Iwakawa,
Chisa Oohira,
Shuhei Noda,
Min-Fu Yang,
Miyako Goto,
Hiroko Tanaka,
Yoshinobu Harada,
Takashi Imai
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of radiation research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.643
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1349-9157
pISSN - 0449-3060
DOI - 10.1269/jrr.45.515
Subject(s) - irradiation , strain (injury) , skin reaction , pig skin , nuclear medicine , dose fractionation , radiation therapy , medicine , immunology , biomedical engineering , physics , nuclear physics
The multifraction regimens commonly used in conventional clinical radiotherapy are largely based on radiobiological experiments. However, no experimental reports on skin reactions focusing on inter-strain differences have displayed clinical relevance to the fractionated dose schedule. In this study, mice of inbred strains A/J, C57BL/6J, and C3H/HeMs were used to reveal inter-strain difference after multifractionated irradiation. Irradiation was performed daily at graded doses of 30-60 Gy total doses, with 10 fractions of 3-6 Gy. Acute skin reactions following irradiation were scored for 50 days after irradiation. Dividing a dose into a number of fractions obviously spared skin damage in the three strains of mice. No mouse exhibited a skin damage score more than 1.5, while single dose irradiation resulted in skin damage scores up to 3. The three different strains, however, showed varying susceptibility to fractionated irradiation within the range under 1.5. C3H/HeMs did not display any skin reaction after irradiation with 40 Gy total dose, while C57BL/6J and A/J demonstrated various skin reactions. Different latent periods of damage were also observed among the strains after irradiation at each dose. Our data suggest that genetic factors cause obvious variations in severity of damage and latent period after fractionated irradiation.

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