scholarly journals Extracting the normal lung dose–response curve from clinical DVH data: a possible role for low dose hyper-radiosensitivity, increased radioresistance

2015 ◽  
Vol 60 (17) ◽  
pp. 6719-6732 ◽  
Author(s):  
J J Gordon ◽  
K Snyder ◽  
H Zhong ◽  
K Barton ◽  
Z Sun ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Carmel Mothersill ◽  
Andrej Rusin ◽  
Colin Seymour

Non-targeted effects (NTE) such as bystander effects or genomic instability have been known for many years but their significance for radiotherapy or medical diagnostic radiology are far from clear. Central to the issue are reported differences in response of normal and tumour tissues to signals from directly irradiated cells. This review will discuss possible mechanisms and implications of these different responses and will then discuss possible new therapeutic avenues suggested by the analysis. Finally, the importance of NTE for diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine which stems from the dominance of NTE in the low dose region of the dose response curve will be presented. Areas such as second cancer induction and microenvironment plasticity will be discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 1692-1700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas M. S. Wolever ◽  
Alexandra L. Jenkins ◽  
Kevin Prudence ◽  
Jodee Johnson ◽  
Ruedi Duss ◽  
...  

The slope of the present dose–response curve for low-dose oat β-glucan (g/g available-carbohydrate) is equivalent to that for high doses.


1966 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 417-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory W. Siskind ◽  
James G. Howard

1. Comparison of dose-response curves indicated that preimmunized animals were slightly more susceptible to the induction of immunological paralysis with pneumococcal polysaccharide than were normal mice. The results also indicated that the paralysis threshold was unaltered by preimmunization. 2. Transient desensitization of immunized mice could be achieved by an amount of polysaccharide far less than that required to induce paralysis. 3. A transient phase of weak immunity was detected prior to the onset of paralysis when induced by relatively low paralyzing doses of polysaccharide. 4. No "low dose" zone of paralysis (analogous to that obtainable with certain protein antigens) could be elicited with pneumococcal polysaccharide. 5. Massive proliferation of lymphoreticular tissues induced by Corynebacterium parvum failed to raise the threshold for paralysis induction, but amplified the immune response over the entire dose-response curve. Similarly, C. parvum failed to abrogate an established state of paralysis. The results suggest that the induction of polysaccharide paralysis is related to the concentration of antigen in the animal and is not modified by the number of immunologically competent cells.


1995 ◽  
Vol 268 (1) ◽  
pp. E21-E27 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Byrne ◽  
J. Sturis ◽  
K. S. Polonsky

The present study was undertaken in normal volunteers to define the alterations in beta-cell responsiveness to glucose associated with different physiological states, including fasting and refeeding, and after prolonged intravenous glucose infusion. A low-dose graded glucose infusion protocol was used to explore the dose-response relationship between glucose and insulin secretion. Studies were performed in 10 normal volunteers, and insulin secretion rates (ISR) were calculated by deconvolution of peripheral C-peptide levels using a two-compartment model utilizing individual kinetic parameters. From 5 to 9 mmol/l glucose, the relationship between glucose and ISR was linear. After a 42-h glucose infusion at a rate of 4 mg.kg-1.min-1, the ISR increased by 53% over the same glucose concentration range (P < 0.002), resulting in a shift of the dose-response curve to the left. Insulin clearance rates decreased 27% after the 42-h glucose infusion (P < 0.001). After a 72-h fast, ISR decreased by 32% from baseline over the 5-8 mmol/l glucose range (P = 0.056), resulting in a shift of the dose-response curve to the right. This shift was reversed by a 42-h period of refeeding, after which ISR was increased by 77% compared with the fasting study (P < 0.02). Refeeding enhanced the beta-cell responsiveness, and ISR increased by 31% after refeeding compared with the baseline study (P < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1997 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 279-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.N. Lucas ◽  
F.S. Hill ◽  
C.E. Burk ◽  
A.D. Lewis ◽  
A.K. Lucas ◽  
...  

1967 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 619-625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Jacob Koed ◽  
Christian Hamburger

ABSTRACT Comparison of the dose-response curves for LH of ovine origin (NIH-LH-S8) and of human origin (IRP-HMG-2) using the OAAD test showed a small, though statistically significant difference, the dose-response curve for LH of human origin being a little flatter. Two standard curves for ovine LH obtained with 14 months' interval, were parallel but at different levels of ovarian ascorbic acid. When the mean ascorbic acid depletions were calculated as percentages of the control levels, the two curves for NIH-LH-S8 were identical. The use of standards of human origin in the OAAD test for LH activity of human preparations is recommended.


1961 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 565-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. Miller

ABSTRACT Four per cent formaldehyde, insulin, or epinephrine in oil was injected for 5 days into pigeons subjected to varying degrees of hypophysectomy alone or together with large lesions in the median eminence and hypothalamus. Adrenals atrophied after the removal of the pars distalis alone or together with the neurohypophysis in untreated pigeons but showed markedly hypertrophic interrenal tissue (cortex in mammals) after treatment with formaldehyde or insulin. The slope of the dose-response curve was similar in operated and unoperated pigeons. The accumulation of bile in the liver parenchyma, which may occur after removal of the pars distalis, is an endogenous stress which was associated regularly with adrenal hypertrophy. After very large lesions of the median eminence and ventral hypothalamus in addition to total hypophysectomy, adrenals hypertrophied rather than atrophied, and the response to formaldehyde paralleled that in intact and »hypohysectomized« pigeons. Interrenal tissue was stimulated regularly; chromaffin tissue was partially degranulated, sometimes showed hyperplasia with colchicine, but only occasionally appeared hypertrophied. Epinephrine in nearly lethal doses caused only minimal adrenal enlargement. After adrenal denervation followed by hypophysectomy, the adrenals were still stimulated by formaldehyde. It appears that the interrenal tissue of the pigeon responds to a humoral stimulus not of hypophyseal origin in the absence of the hypophyseal-hypothalamic system.


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