Summary
Radiation-induced atheromatosis has been studied for 200 kVp X-rays and 15 MeV neutrons. From the results of two earlier experiments, a r.b.e. <1 was expected for neutrons.
(1) Irradiation of blood-vessels causes depolymerization of the mucopolysaccharides in the vessel wall, resulting in atheromatosis, and (2) in two other mucopolysaccharide systems a r.b.e. <1 is observed for fast neutrons.
Irradiation of the carotid arteries of a total number of 120 hypercholesterolaemic rabbits, divided over several groups, with 500 and 1000 rad of X-rays or neutrons results, however, in atheromatous plaques which are more pronounced for neutrons than for X-rays at the 500 rad dose-level; for a dose of 1000 rad the effect of neutrons is less extensive than the effect of X-rays.
These results lead to the assumption that the origin of the atheromatosis seems not only to be the mucopolysaccharide depolymerization, but that radiation induced damage at the cellular level must be taken into account.