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カテゴリー「thyroid cancer」

Functional changes of the thyroid gland and adrenal gland in children with hematologic disorders affected by the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, in the remote period

Author: O.I. Evko

Reference: 2008, dissertation, candidate of med. sci.

URL: http://www.ukrdissers.info/disser_136567.html

Thyroid cancer in children and young adults of Ukraine, its morphological characteristics, after the Chernobyl accident

Author: T.I. Bogdanova

Reference: Dissertation doc. med. sci., 1996

Keywords: children, young adults

URL: http://www.ukrdissers.info/disser_9335.html

Papillary microcarcinoma of the thyroid gland after the Chernobyl accident: Pathomorphological characteristics

Author: I.L. Avetis’yan

Reference: Dissertation cand.med.sci., 1997

Keywords: Papillary microcarcinoma

URL: http://www.ukrdissers.info/disser_20914.html

Tactical characteristics and choice of method of chirurgical treatment of malignant tumors of the thyroid gland, in the post-Chernobyl period

Author: A.V. Lyutkevich

Reference: Dissertation cand.med.sci., 2007

Keywords: chirurgical treatment

URL: http://www.ukrdissers.info/disser_118812.html

Characteristics of clinics and chirurgical treatment of patients with thyroid cancer, after the Chernobyl acciden

Author: A.E. Kovalenko

Reference: Dissert. doc.med.sci., 2003

Keywords: chirurgical treatment

URL: http://www.ukrdissers.info/disser_75476.html

“In the 25-year post-Chernobyl period we have gone through many fears. What frightened our people in 1986 was the increased radiation background and its consequences. In reality, nothing as such happened.”

Author: Rafael Artyunyan

Reference: comment of experts, 25 march, 2011

Keywords: Cesium, Iodine, Radiophobia, Radiation safety, Health

Abstract: “Some organizations, which call themselves “ecological”, have declared that the incidence of cancer after Fukushima NPP accident will be 120 thousand. Our specialists have calculated the possible incidence of thyroid cancer in children of Fukushima, on the basis of Japanese official data. Their calculation show no such possibilities.”

URL: http://www.atomic-energy.ru/statements/2011/03/25/20244

WHO: Risk of cancer disease among inhabitants of Fukushima is law.

Reference: RIA news, 28. November, 2012

Keywords: Fukushima, harmful fallouts, biological consequences of ion exposure

Abstract: WHO reports that thyroid cancer incident among adolescence and adults, living in vicinity of Fukushima Daiichi NPP, should be extremely law. If the incidence among people living in areas without radioactive contamination is 0.76% for female and 0.21% for masculine, the same for the ones living in contaminated areas is 0.85% for female and 0.23 for masculine. This is the first of such estimation reported by WHO, and it is based on data from the disasters in Nagasaki and Hiroshima.

nearly 170 workers at Fukushima received high dose of radiation

Reference: News RIA 24, May, 2012

Keywords: Liquidators, Fukushima, dosimeter, Iodine 131

Abstract: Researcher of the consequences of  the Chernobyl disaster Kiyohiko Mabuchi (US National Cancer institute) says, there might be little increase of carcinoma among liquidators of Fukushima. Comparing Fukushima to Chernobyl, the exposure dose in Japan is much lower than the latter.

URL: http://www.atomic-energy.ru/news/2012/05/24/33624

Interim report: The Fukushima disaster has not harmed health

Reference: News, 29. May 2012

Keywords: Fukushima, health, harmful fallouts

Abstract: “New Scientist” reports: already more than a year has passed since the Fukushima disaster, so it is possible to make a report on the effect of fallouts on people’s health. According to the specialist, there is no need to consider unfavorable consequences, since the quantity of radioactive fallouts is much less than the same of Chernobyl. The exposure level of children, affected by the Fukushima disaster, is 10 times less than those of Chernobyl.

URL: http://www.atomic-energy.ru/news/2012/05/29/33743

25 YEARS OF THE CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT : Results and prospects of overcoming its effects in Russia 1986-2011

Author: V.A Puchkov, T.A. Marchenko, V.A. Vladimirov, G.G. Onischenko, G.S. Perminova, R.V. Arutyunyan, O.A. Pavlovsky, I.I. Linge, R.M. Barkudarov, S.I. Voronov, S.V. panchenko, A.V. Simonov, Yu.A. Izrael, A.F. Tsyb, V.K. Ivanov, M.A. Maksyutov, L.A. Ilyin, A.K. Guskova, R.M. Aleksakhin, N.I. Sanzharova, I.K. Romanovich, M.I. Balonov, A.A. Borovoi, S.M. Vakulovsky, I.I. Maradudin, S.A. Rodin, G.M. Rumyantseva, G.A. Romanova, P.V. Prudnikov

Reference: Russian national report, Ministry of Civil Defense, Emergencies and Elimination of Consequences of Natural Disasters

Abstract: 1.Organization for minimization of the accident’s consequences 2. Radioecological consequences of the accident 3. Dose-related stress on the liquidators and people 4. Medical consequences of the accident 5. Overcoming the effects of the Chernobyl accident

URL: http://www.atomic-energy.ru/files/books/chernobyl_25.pdf

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