Difference between revisions of "Effects of Exposure"
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− | '''''ICRP Publication 118'' paragraph 10''' | + | '''''[[ICRP Publication 118]]'' paragraph 10''' |
<blockquote> The manifestations of tissue injury vary from one tissue to another depending on cellular composition, proliferation rate, and mechanisms of response to radiation, which may be highly tissue specific. Examples ... include cataracts of the lens of the eye, non-malignant damage to the skin, cell depletion in the bone marrow causing haematological deficiencies, and gonadal cell damage leading to impairment of fertility. Tissue reactions, especially late reactions, also depend on damage to blood vessels or elements of the extracellular matrix, which are common to most organs of the body. </blockquote> | <blockquote> The manifestations of tissue injury vary from one tissue to another depending on cellular composition, proliferation rate, and mechanisms of response to radiation, which may be highly tissue specific. Examples ... include cataracts of the lens of the eye, non-malignant damage to the skin, cell depletion in the bone marrow causing haematological deficiencies, and gonadal cell damage leading to impairment of fertility. Tissue reactions, especially late reactions, also depend on damage to blood vessels or elements of the extracellular matrix, which are common to most organs of the body. </blockquote> |
Revision as of 21:09, 8 March 2019
For the purposes of radiological protection, harmful effects of radiation exposure are grouped into two categories:
Deterministic Effects
Effects, such as skin burns, that only appear at relatively high doses. |
Stochastic Effects
Effects, such as cancer, that are assumed to pose some risk even at low doses. |
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Quotes from ICRP Publications
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