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Media Resources :: Newsroom
Low-level radiation exposure
has beneficial effects on small mammals
24 January 2005
Researchers of a study published
in the latest issue of Environmental
Toxicology and Chemistry tested the hypothesis
that low doses of gamma radiation have beneficial effects.
Researchers Rudy Boonstra, Richard G. Manzon, Steve
Mihok, and Julie E. Helson found that low, chronic doses
of gamma radiation produced apparent hormetic effects
associated with an increase in longevity in natural
populations of meadow voles.
Hormesis is defined as a phenomenon where low doses
of an otherwise harmful agent can result in stimulatory
or beneficial effects. This phenomenon has been observed
in a broad range of chemicals including alcohol and
its metabolites, antibiotics, hydrocarbons, herbicides,
insecticides, and fungicides, as well as physical processes
such as radiation exposure and caloric restriction.
Effects of hormesis have been observed in a wide range
of organisms, from microbes and fungi to plants and
animals. Hormetic responses are varied in form and include
increased longevity; growth, reproductive, and physiological
responses; and metabolic effects.
The researchers' findings suggest that a moderate increase
in glucocorticoid levels, associated with low-level
radiation, could be an important factor underlying the
increase in longevity that has been observed in other
studies on small mammals exposed to low-level radiation.
To read the entire study, click here: http://www.allenpress.com/pdf/entc_24_215_334_343.pdf
To read the entire study, please visit http://setac.allenpress.com.
Environmental Toxicology
and Chemistry is a monthly journal published
by the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
(SETAC). For more information, visit www.setac.org.
[Hormetic Effects of Gamma Radiation
on the Stress Axis of Natural Populations of Meadow
Voles, Environmental Toxicology
and Chemistry] 2005; 24 (2): 334-343
Contact:
April M. Phillips
T 850 469 1500 x 28
aprilp@setac.org
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