Occupational radiation exposure indicated by increased chromosomal damage in lymphocytes of orthopaedic surgeons in Japan
Donovan Anderson, Valerie Swee Ting Goh, Yohei Fujishima, Ryo Nakayama, Naoki Echigoya, Yasuyuki Ishibashi, Tomisato Miura

TL;DR
This study found increased chromosomal damage in orthopaedic surgeons in Japan, suggesting potential occupational radiation exposure and health risks.
Contribution
The study provides evidence of chromosomal damage in orthopaedic surgeons due to occupational radiation exposure in Japan.
Findings
Orthopaedic surgeons showed increased dicentric and translocation chromosome aberrations compared to background levels.
Surgeons with adverse health effects or skin cancer had the highest chromosome aberration frequencies.
Estimated whole-body doses were 75 ± 24 mGy for dicentrics and 321 ± 103 mGy for translocations.
Abstract
This study aims to assess chromosome aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes of orthopaedic surgeons in Japan, specifically focusing on potential occupational dose overexposure and its correlation with adverse health reactions. The main objective is to investigate the extent of chromosomal damage and evaluate the accuracy of estimating radiation dose with cytogenetic biodosimetry where no physical dosimetry exists. This study involved 18 male orthopaedic surgeons, with occupational experience spanning 15 to 33 years. Chromosome aberrations were analyzed in 32 573 and 45 674 cells with dicentric chromosome and translocation assays, respectively. Statistical tests were used to retrospectively estimate whole-body doses with chromosome damage and compare observed aberration frequencies with work experience, while considering factors such as adverse health effects and skin cancer…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Dose and Imaging · Carcinogens and Genotoxicity Assessment · Effects of Radiation Exposure
