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The effect of infrared and X-ray radiation on the production of reactive oxygen species in blood and induction of cytogenetic damage in the bone marrow of mice in vivo
Authors:Diukina A R  Zaichkina S I  Rozanova O M  Romanchenko S P  Mal'tseva V N  Aptikaeva G F
Abstract:The goal of the present work was to study the effect of infrared light (IRL) at a wavelength of 850 nm modulated by a frequency of 101 Hz with a mode of power 22 mW/cm2 and X-rays with a voltage of 200 kV at a dose rate of 1 Gy/min on the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in blood cells using luminol-dependent chemiluminescence, as well as on the induction of a cytogenetic damage in bone marrow cells of mice by the in vivo micronucleus test. The experiments performed have shown: 1) the level of the ROS production in blood of the mice exposed to IRL and X-rays at an adapting dose of 0.1 Gy reaches the peak value after 0.5 h and drops to the ROS level in untreated animals 5 h after either exposure; 2) irradiation of mice with IRL and X-rays at a dose of 0.1 Gy induces adaptive responses both in blood cells and bone marrow cells of mice. These adaptive responses were revealed only 5 h after both exposures, when the level of ROS production decreased to the ROS level in untreated animals; they are equal in magnitude and dynamics and persist up to 2 months.
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