1.Research Progress on the Protective Effect of Intestinal Flora on Radiation-induced Lung Injury in Thoracic Tumors.
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer 2023;26(6):467-472
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Radiation therapy is one of the main treatment methods for patients with thoracic malignant tumors, which can effectively improve the survival rate of the patients. However, radiation therapy can also cause damage to normal tissues while treating tumors, leading to radiation-induced lung injury such as radiation pneumonia and pulmonary fibrosis. Radiation-induced lung injury is a complex pathophysiological process involving many factors, and its prevention and treatment is one of the difficult problems in the field of radiation medicine. Therefore, the search for sensitive predictors of radiation-induced lung injury can guide clinical radiotherapy and reduce the incidence of radiation-induced lung injury. With the in-depth study of intestinal flora, it can drive immune cells or metabolites to reach lung tissue through the circulatory system to play a role, and participate in the occurrence, development and treatment of lung diseases. At present, there are few studies on intestinal flora and radiation-induced lung injury. Therefore, this paper will comprehensively elaborate the interaction between intestinal flora and radiation-induced lung injury, so as to provide a new direction and strategy for studying the protective effect of intestinal flora on radiation-induced lung injury.
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		                        			Humans
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		                        			Lung Injury/prevention & control*
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		                        			Gastrointestinal Microbiome
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		                        			Lung Neoplasms/radiotherapy*
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		                        			Lung/pathology*
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		                        			Radiation Injuries/metabolism*
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		                        			Thoracic Neoplasms
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
2.Chinese consensus on diagnosis and treatment of radiation proctitis (2018).
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(12):1321-1336
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Radiation proctitis denotes the radiation damage of rectum caused by radiotherapy to pelvic malignancy. The clinical practices of radiation proctitis should be fully considered from diagnosis, treatment and prevention. In order to determine appropriate treatment strategies, the diagnosis of radiation proctitis should be based on clinical symptoms, endoscopic findings, imaging and histopathology to assess severity of symptoms and stage of disease. In terms of treatment decisions, non-surgical interventions are generally applied to relieve major symptoms and avoid serious complications. Diverting colostomy and restorative resection are the main surgical treatments for patients with recurrent symptoms. In terms of prevention, radiation proctitis should be prevented by improvement of radiotherapy technology, physical protection and prophylactic medication. This guide aims to provide guidance for the clinical practices of radiation proctitis in China.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			China
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		                        			Consensus
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		                        			Humans
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		                        			Proctitis
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		                        			diagnosis
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		                        			therapy
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		                        			Radiation Injuries
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		                        			diagnosis
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		                        			prevention & control
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		                        			therapy
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		                        			Rectum
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		                        			pathology
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		                        			radiation effects
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
3.Low Hepatic Toxicity in Primary and Metastatic Liver Cancers after Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy Using 3 Fractions.
Sun Hyun BAE ; Mi Sook KIM ; Won Il JANG ; Chul Koo CHO ; Hyung Jun YOO ; Kum Bae KIM ; Chul Ju HAN ; Su Cheol PARK ; Dong Han LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(8):1055-1061
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			This study evaluated the incidence of hepatic toxicity after stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) using 3 fractions to the liver, and identified the predictors for hepatic toxicity. We retrospectively reviewed 78 patients with primary and metastatic liver cancers, who underwent SABR using 3 fractions between 2003 and 2011. To examine the incidence of hepatic toxicity, we defined newly developed hepatic toxicity> or =grade 2 according to the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v4.0 within 3 months after the end of SABR as a significant adverse event. To identify the predictors for hepatic toxicity, we analyzed several clinical and dosimetric parameters (rV(5Gy)-rV(35Gy): normal liver volume receiving 
		                        		
		                        			Aged
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		                        			*Dose Fractionation
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		                        			Female
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		                        			Hepatitis/*etiology/pathology/prevention & control
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		                        			Humans
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		                        			Liver Neoplasms/complications/pathology/*surgery
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		                        			Male
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		                        			Middle Aged
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		                        			Neoplasm Metastasis
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		                        			Radiation Injuries/*etiology/pathology/prevention & control
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		                        			Radiosurgery/*adverse effects/*methods
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		                        			Radiotherapy Dosage
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		                        			Treatment Outcome
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
4.The Effect of Probiotics for Preventing Radiation-Induced Morphological Changes in Intestinal Mucosa of Rats.
Yongkan KI ; Wontaek KIM ; Heunglae CHO ; Kijung AHN ; Youngmin CHOI ; Dongwon KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2014;29(10):1372-1378
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Radiation therapy is an important treatment modality for abdominal or pelvic cancer, but there is a common and serious complication such as radiation-induced enteritis. Probiotics is reported to have positive effects against radiation-induced enteropathy. In this study, morphological changes of bowel mucosa were analyzed in rats to presume the effect of probiotics on radiation-induced enteritis and its correlation with radiation dose. A total of 48 adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to two groups and received a solution containing 1.0x108 colony-forming units of Lactiobacillus acidophilus or water once daily for 10 days. Each of two groups was divided into three subgroups and abdomino-pelvic area of each subgroup was irradiated with 10, 15, and 20 Gy, respectively on the seventh day of feeding the solutions. All rats were sacrificed 3 days after irradiation and the mucosal thickness and villus height of jejunum, ileum and colon were measured. The morphological parameters of the small intestine represented significant differences between two solution groups irradiated 10 or 15 Gy, except for villus height of jejunum in 15 Gy-subgroup (P=0.065). There was no significant morphometric difference between two groups irradiated with 20 Gy of radiation. Probiotics appear to be effective for the morphological shortening of small intestinal mucosa damaged by radiation less than or equal to 15 Gy.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Animals
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		                        			Colon/pathology
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		                        			Disease Models, Animal
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		                        			Enteritis/pathology/prevention & control
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		                        			Ileum/pathology
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		                        			Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology/*radiation effects
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		                        			Intestine, Small
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		                        			Jejunum/pathology
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		                        			Lactobacillus acidophilus/*metabolism
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		                        			Male
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		                        			Probiotics/administration & dosage/*pharmacology
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		                        			Radiation Injuries, Experimental/*prevention & control/therapy
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		                        			Radiation Protection/*methods
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		                        			Random Allocation
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		                        			Rats
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		                        			Rats, Sprague-Dawley
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
5.Prevention of Inonotus obliquus polysaccharides for high power microwave radiation induced testicular injury in rats: an experimental research.
Li-Wei ZHAO ; Xiu-Hong ZHONG ; Yan-Mei SUN ; Shu-Yan YANG ; Nan SHEN ; Yi-Zhong ZHANG ; Ning-Jiang YANG ; Kuang REN ; Shi-Jie LU
Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine 2014;34(7):864-868
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effect of Inonotus obliquus polysaccharides on testicular injury induced by exposure to high power microwave (HPM) in rats.
METHODSA total of 30 male Wistar rats were randomly divided into 5 groups, i.e., the normal control group, the microwave radiation model group, the treatment group, the new microwave radiation model group, and the prevention group, 6 in each group. All rats, except those in the normal control group, were exposed to microwave at an average power density of 200 mW/cm2 for 6 min. Rats in the control group and the model group were administered with normal saline by gastrogavage, once a day. Rats in the treatment group and the prevention group were given with Inonotus obliquus polysaccharides by gastrogavage, 2 mL each time (400 mg/kg body weight), once a day. All rats were sacrificed on the 11th day.The sperm density and the rate of sperm deformity were determined. Pathological changes of testis were observed by light microscope and transmission electron microscope.
RESULTSShort-term HPM irradiation could significantly reduce the sperm density and increase the sperm deformity rate (P < 0.05). Meanwhile, obvious pathological changes of testes occurred. Compared with the two model groups, the sperm density increased and the sperm deformity rate decreased in the treatment group and the prevention group (P < 0.05). Under the light microscope, injuries of spermatogenic cells and stromal cells, as well as vascular dilatation and congestion were obviously alleviated in the treatment group and the prevention group. Mitochondrial swelling and endoplasmic reticulum expansion shown by ultrastructural observation were also significantly alleviated. Of them, injuries of spermatogenic cells and inflammation response were milder in the treatment group than in the prevention group.
CONCLUSIONSInonotus obliquus polysaccharides had significant protective effect on microwave radiation induced testicular injury. Better effect was obtained by therapeutic medication than preventive medication.
Animals ; Basidiomycota ; chemistry ; Male ; Microwaves ; adverse effects ; Polysaccharides ; pharmacology ; Radiation Injuries, Experimental ; prevention & control ; Radiation-Protective Agents ; pharmacology ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar ; Testis ; drug effects ; pathology ; radiation effects
6.Effect of modified Zhuye Shigao Decoction and its components on preventing radiation esophagitis of rats.
Jun-zhang LU ; Chen WANG ; Ming-hui YANG ; Hong ZHAO ; Yi LIU ; Xiu-tang CAO
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2014;20(6):462-467
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effect of Modified Zhuye Shigao Decoction (MZSD) and its components on preventing radiation esophagitis of rats.
METHODSOne hundred Wistar rats were randomly divided into 5 groups, including the control group, radiation model group, MZSD group, Zhuye Shigao Decoction (ZSD) group, and added ingredients group, 20 rats in each group. The model of radiation esophagitis of rat was established by once local radiation of 40 Gy (330 Mu/min) with a high energy linear accelerator. The administration of Chinese medicine was continued for 14 days from 7 days before radiation application in the three treatment groups. On the 7th and 14th day, the serum was isolated and the levels of inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α), interleukin 1β (IL-1β) and IL-8 were tested. The pathological slices of esophagus were obtained, and the pathological changes were observed. During the whole process, weight and food intake were recorded each day.
RESULTSOn the 7th day after radiation, the esophagus of rats in the MZSD group was almost intact, and the pathological injury score was significantly lower than that of the radiation model group, ZSD group and added ingredients group (P<0.01). Compared with the control group, the body weight and food intake of rats in the radiation model group were significantly decreased, and the levels of TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8 were significantly increased (P<0.05 or P<0.01), while the MZSD group showed a significant increase in body weight and food intake, and a significant decrease in the levels of TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8 compared with the radiation model group, ZSD group and added ingredients group (P <0.05 or P<0.01).
CONCLUSIONMZSD prevents the development of radiation esophagitis probably by inhibiting the generation and release of the inflammatory cytokines TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8.
Animals ; Body Weight ; drug effects ; Cytokines ; metabolism ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Esophagitis ; drug therapy ; pathology ; prevention & control ; Esophagus ; drug effects ; pathology ; Feeding Behavior ; drug effects ; Inflammation Mediators ; metabolism ; Male ; Neutrophil Infiltration ; drug effects ; Radiation Injuries ; drug therapy ; pathology ; prevention & control ; Rats, Wistar ; Time Factors
7.Protective effect of an extract of Guipi Pill against radiation-induced damage in mice.
Ping XU ; Jun-Qing JIA ; En-Jin JIANG ; Li-Ping KANG ; Ke-Lei WU
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2012;18(7):490-495
OBJECTIVETo study the protective effect of an extract of Guipi Pill () against radiation-induced damage.
METHODSA total of 100 Kunming mice were randomly divided into normal group, model group, positive drug group (treated with radioprotective agent "523", 5 mg/kg at 24 h before irradiation) and two treatment groups, with 20 mice in each group. The extract of water extraction-alcohol precipitation (WAP) from Guipi Pill were administered orally to the mice in the two treatment groups at the dose of 500 and 1,000 mg/kg, respectively, for 6 days prior to whole body radiation (8 Gy). Fifty mice with 10 in each group were used to observe the survival rate 30 days after radiation. The other 50 mice with 10 in each group were sacrificed on day 10 after radiation (6 Gy) in order to take blood, liver and unilateral femur.
RESULTSPretreatment prior to irradiation with WAP resulted in a significantly higher 30-day survival rate of mice after exposure to a potentially lethal dose of 8-Gy radiation. WAP could significantly increase the total white blood cell count and DNA content of bone marrow, and it also increased the activity of various antioxidant enzymes, such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, total antioxidant capacity and glutathione peroxidase in liver tissue of mice, which were reduced by radiation treatment. Maleic dialdehyde level and bone marrow micronucleus rate were significantly reduced by WAP, which were increased after 6-Gy radiation.
CONCLUSIONWAP of Guipi Pill could increase the 30-day survival rate and the antioxidant capacity as well as protect bone marrow in mice. WAP of Guipi Pill is an effective radioprotective agent.
Animals ; Antioxidants ; metabolism ; Bone Marrow ; pathology ; Chemical Precipitation ; DNA ; metabolism ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; therapeutic use ; Leukocyte Count ; Liver ; metabolism ; pathology ; radiation effects ; Male ; Mice ; Micronuclei, Chromosome-Defective ; Phytotherapy ; Plant Extracts ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Protective Agents ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Radiation Injuries, Experimental ; blood ; drug therapy ; prevention & control ; Survival Analysis ; Water
8.Protective effect of Renshen Yangrong Decoction (人参养荣汤) on bone marrow against radiation injury in mouse.
Yan-zhi CHEN ; Fei LIN ; Gui-bao ZHUANG ; Yan REN ; Ping-ping LI
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2011;17(6):453-458
OBJECTIVETo explore the effect of Renshen Yangrong Decoction (人参养荣汤, RYD) in protecting bone marrow from radiation injury.
METHODSOne hundred and eighty Kuming mice were subjected to the three tests for anti-radiation injury effect evaluation, i.e. the test of peripheral white blood cell (WBC) count, the test of bone marrow nucleated cell count, and the bone marrow micronucleus test, using 60 mice for each test. The mice in each test were divided into 6 groups: the blank control group, the model control group, the positive control group treated by Shiyiwei Shenqi Tablet (十一味参芪片, 1.0 g/kg), and three RYD groups treated with high (42.0 g/kg), moderate (21.0 g/kg), and low (10.5 g/kg) doses of crude drugs of RYD, with 10 mice in each group. The treatment was given by gastrogavage perfusion continuously for 7-14 days before mice received (60)Co-γ ray radiation and continued until the end of the experiment. The body weights of the mice were monitored, the changes in peripheral WBC and bone marrow nucleated cells were counted, and the variation in bone marrow micronucleated cells was observed on the respective appointed days.
RESULTSA significant decrease in body weight, peripheral WBC count, and bone marrow nucleated cell count, as well as marked changes in bone marrow micronucleated cells were observed in the mice after radiation, indicating that the radiation injury model was successfully established. As compared with the model control group, the decrease in body weight, peripheral WBC count, and bone marrow nucleated cell count, as well as the increase in bone marrow micronucleus cell count in the high dosage RYD treated group were obviously inhibited or lessened (P<0.05 or P<0.01).
CONCLUSIONRYD showed obvious protective effect in mice with bone marrow injury induced by radiation.
Animals ; Body Weight ; drug effects ; radiation effects ; Bone Marrow ; drug effects ; pathology ; radiation effects ; Bone Marrow Cells ; drug effects ; pathology ; radiation effects ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; Leukocyte Count ; Mice ; Radiation Injuries ; blood ; pathology ; prevention & control ; Radiation-Protective Agents ; pharmacology
9.Determination of the repair half-time of human nasopharyngeal carcinoma cell lines CNE1, CNE2, HONE1 and C666-1.
Wen-jun WANG ; Xiao-kang ZHENG ; Jia-bin LIU ; Ya-wei YUAN ; Long-hua CHEN ; Heng-wen SUN
Journal of Southern Medical University 2010;30(4):777-778
OBJECTIVETo determine the repair half-time (T1/2), a speed parameter of sub-lethal damage repair (SLDR), of human nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) cell lines CNE1, HONE1, C666-1 and CNE2.
METHODSA total radiation dose of 8 Gy divided into 4+4 Gy was delivered to the cell lines at the interval of 0 s, 15 s, 30 s, 1 h, 2 h, 4 h or 6 h. The cell survival fractions were determined using the standard cell clonogenic assay. The curves of the changes in the surviving cell fraction after a total dose of 8 Gy, as a function of the interval between the two doses of 4 Gy, were fitted manually, and the T1/2 of each cell line was calculated according to the curves.
RESULTSThe T1/2 of CNE1, HONE1, C666-1 and CNE2 were 18 s, 22 s, 29 s and 27 s, respectively.
CONCLUSIONThe speed of SLDR of NPC cells is quite rapid, indicating that the fraction delivery time longer than 20 s might decrease the effect of radiotherapy.
Cell Line, Tumor ; Cell Survival ; radiation effects ; Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation ; Humans ; Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms ; pathology ; radiotherapy ; Radiation Injuries ; prevention & control ; Radiotherapy, Conformal ; Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated
10.Influence of electromagnetic fields on bone fracture in rats: role of CAPE.
Ekrem CICEK ; Osman GOKALP ; Remzi VAROL ; Gokhan CESUR
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2009;22(2):157-160
OBJECTIVETo study the effects of radiation emitted by mobile phones on bone strength and caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) on the changes induced by radiation.
METHODSForty-eight Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into five groups. Rats in the control group (first group) were left within the experimental setup for 30 min/day for 28 days without radiation exposure. Nine hundred MHz radiation group was broke down into 2 subgroups (group 1/2). Both subgroups were exposed to radiation for 28 days (30 min/day). The next group was also divided into 2 subgroups (group 3/4). Each was exposed to 1800 MHz of radiation for 28 days (30 min/day). The third and fifth groups were also treated with CAPE for 28 days. Treatment groups received ip caffeic acid phenethyl ester (10 micromol/kg per day) before radiation session. Bone fracture was analyzed.
RESULTSBreaking force, bending strength, and total fracture energy decreased in the irradiated groups but increased in the treatment groups.
CONCLUSIONRadiation and CAPE can significantly improve bone.
Animals ; Biomechanical Phenomena ; Bone Density ; Caffeic Acids ; administration & dosage ; Electromagnetic Fields ; Femur ; pathology ; Fractures, Bone ; prevention & control ; Male ; Phenylethyl Alcohol ; administration & dosage ; analogs & derivatives ; Radiation Injuries, Experimental ; prevention & control ; Radiation-Protective Agents ; administration & dosage ; Rats ; Rats, Sprague-Dawley
            
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