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"Low Level Revision 1 1.4
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Professor Emeritus, and Member of the UN
Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), of the Central
Laboratory for Radiological Protection, Dr. Zbigniew Jaworowski, states (1995b) that: "In mammals, radiation hormesis enhances defense reactions against neoplastic and infectious diseases, increases longevity and improves fertility. ..in an experiment with mice the incidence of leukemia, cancers, and sarcomas was lower in animals irradiated with cesium-137 gamma radiation doses of 2.5 to 20 mSy than it was in nonirradiated controls. The number of all malignant neoplasms in animals exposed to a single dose of 10 mSv was more than 30% lower than in nonirradiated controls. In several experiments, small initial radiation doses have been shown to improve the survival of animals subsequently irradiated with large, near lethal doses. In other experiments, an increased life span was found in animals irradiated with doses between 250 and 3000 mSv. ....a group of French studies started in the early 1960s, indicate that protozoa and bacteria exposed to artificially lowered levels of natural radiation demonstrate deficiency symptoms expressed as dramatically decreased proliferations. This indicates that ionizing radiation may be essential for life." "In 1943, during the early stages of the Manhattan Project, it was found that
the animals exposed to inhalation of uranium dust at levels that were expected to be fatal
actually lived longer, appeared healthier, and had more offspring than the noncontaminated
control animals. For years, these results were treated as an anomaly but later studies
produced similar results (Brucer 1989). The first UNSCEAR report to the General Assembly
of the United Nations presented the results of experiments showing longer survival times
of mice and guinea pigs exposed to small doses of gamma radiation (UNSCEAR 1958)." |
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