A Prospective cohort study investigates the health consequences and biomarkers in Iraqi radiation workers
Rasha Sabeeh Ahmed, Haidar Ahmed Shamran, Dunia Ali Shamsi

TL;DR
This study examines the health effects of ionizing radiation on Iraqi hospital workers and finds elevated biomarkers of DNA damage and oxidative stress compared to controls.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical evidence on the health consequences of occupational radiation exposure in Iraqi workers using multiple biomarkers.
Findings
Radiation workers showed significantly higher malondialdehyde levels, DNA methylation, and DNA fragmentation compared to controls.
Buccal tissue analysis revealed increased karyorrhectic and differentiated cells in radiation workers.
Basal cell levels were lower in radiation workers, indicating potential tissue damage.
Abstract
Objectives: Ionizing radiation has the potential to change the pattern of DNA methylation and can cause oxidative damage that may impact DNA. In this prospective cohort study, the effect of ionizing radiation on Iraqi radiation workers has been estimated by investigating the malondialdehyde levels, DNA methylation, DNA fragmentation, as well as the karyorrhectic, differentiated, and basal cells in buccal tissue. This work involved 80 participants, 40 hospital X-ray workers, and 40 control. Blood samples have been investigated using the NWLSS™ malondialdehyde assay, the gSYNC™ DNA extraction kit, and the comet assay. The mean values of malondialdehyde level, DNA methylation, and DNA fragmentation (%DNA in tai), in workers were found to be 3.00±0.53, 51.63±26.44, and 26.73±12.67, respectively, while in the control were found to be 0.67±0.11, 13.25±11.30, and 9.09±11.96, respectively. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvances in Oncology and Radiotherapy · Health and Well-being Studies
