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タグ「dose rate」

EEG, cognitive and psychopathological abnormalities in children irradiated in utero

Author: Loganovskaja T.K., Loganovsky K.N.

Reference: Int. J. Psychophysiol. — 1999. — Vol. 34, № 3. — P. 213–224

Keywords: EEG, clinical neuropsychiatric examination, IQ test

Abstract: Computerised EEG, a clinical neuropsychiatric examination, and IQ tests were examined in 50 randomly selected prenatally irradiated 9-10-year-old children and compared with 50 randomly selected non-exposed control children of the same age. In the prenatally irradiated children a disorganised EEG-pattern with slow and paroxysmal activity (acute and high-voltage delta-waves, sometimes: spike-waves) in the left fronto-temporal region was disclosed. There was also a significant predominance of delta- and beta (dominant frequency: 20 Hz)-power in the frontal lobe, particularly, in the left fronto-temporal region, together with depressed spectral theta-power. The more disorganised EEG-patterns were observed in those children exposed at 8-15 weeks of prenatal development, while left-hemisphere abnormalities were more typical for those exposed later at 16-25 weeks of gestation. There was also a significant increase of borderline and low range (70-90) IQ scores and a significant decrease of high verbal (> 110) IQ scores. Disorders of psychological development, particularly specific developmental disorders of speech, language, and scholastic skills were more common and correlated with left-sided slow- and fast-wave activity. Behavioural and emotional disorders (social estrangement, exhaustion, emotional lability, tearfulness, apathy) were also more common and associated with a L > R imbalance in arousal. We hypothesise that the cerebral basis of mental disorders in the prenatally irradiated children is the malfunction of the left hemisphere limbic-reticular structures, particularly in those exposed at the most critical period of cerebrogenesis (16-25 weeks of gestation). We propose that the left hemisphere is more vulnerable to prenatal irradiation than the right.

URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10610046

Antioxidants in eggs of great tits Parus major from Chernobyl and hatching success

  • Title: Antioxidants in eggs of great tits Parus major from Chernobyl and hatching success

Author: Møller, Anders Pape / Karadas, Filis / Mousseau, Timothy A.

Reference: Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 178 (6), p.735-743, Aug 2008     

doi: 10.1007/s00360-008-0262-z

Keywords: Antioxidants · Clutch size · Dose rate ·Hatching success · Laying date

Abstract: Antioxidants are powerful protectors against the damaging eVects of free radicals that constitute the inevitable by-products of aerobic metabolism. Growing embryos are particularly susceptible to the damaging eVects of free radicals produced during rapid growth, and mothers of many species provide protection against such damage by allocating antioxidants to their eggs.

URL:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18392836

Birds prefer to breed in sites with low radioactivity in Chernobyl

Title: Birds prefer to breed in sites with low radioactivity in Chernobyl

Author: Moller, A.P / Mousseau, T.A

Reference: Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 274 (1616), p.1443-1448, Jun 2007

doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.0005

Keywords: clutch size, dose rate, hatching success, laying date

Abstract: Low-level radioactive contamination may affect choice of breeding site and life-history decisions if (i) radioactivity directly affects body condition or (ii) it affects resource abundance that then secondarily influences reproductive decisions. We tested the effects of radioactive contamination on nest-site choice and reproduction in a community of hole nesting birds by putting up nest boxes in areas differing in levels of background radiation.

URL: http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/274/1616/1443.full

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